Tahr with an old school rifle

JP100

WKR
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Dec 20, 2013
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Location
South Island New Zealand
Tahr with the ol three oh

Well the Tahr ballot period rolled around quickly again, and luckily my brother had drawn a block for first period. My brother (Jimmy), I and good mate Tim would be making up the team for this year.
Leading up the hunt the weather looked fairly average and after a chat with James Scott we decided to pull out of our west coast adventure. I have spent plenty of time in a tent waiting for weather to clear and was keen to explore some new east coast country so we made a new plan.

We headed to a large private property I have access to for Wallabys and Fallow deer while the worst of the weather passed, then we would head into the mountains after Tahr. Wallabys are in high numbers on this farm and we were set to do a bit of a clean-up for the farmer. 100 something Wallabies and 9 tasty deer later we were out of ammo for the .223 and our freezers were packed.


We headed into country that we had looked at on the maps a lot but had not actually hunted. We decided on a couple of short overnight trips into different valleys to cover as much ground as possible and see what we see.
We set off in the dark at a fair pace to get to a good glassing point by day break. As the sun warmed the valley we put our eyes to work. Jimmy had recently acquired some new Leica’s and he put them to good use spotting multiple Bull Tahr and Chamois in quick succession. After a bit of a look through the scope we had a Bull that was worth a closer inspection. He was a mile off but with a big body and a long hair he looked to have some age about him.

We set off on a steep but relativity easy climb to the bulls’ last location, he entered some real nasty stuff and hoped we could get above him for a closer inspection. By lunchtime we had made our intended camp spot above the bull and after some lunch we set off to see if we could locate him. After a lot of searching we could not find the bull and it looked like he had entered some true Tahr country in search of some nannies. From our vantage point we could cover a lot of ground and by late afternoon we had spotted a couple of mobs of nannies and multiple Bulls. The Rut was just starting and older bulls have a habit of wandering between nanny groups looking for girls on heat. They can easily cover country that would take us days to negotiate.
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From our evening glassing spot we did get to witness the best Tahr fight I have seen, two younger bulls going hard at it in some crazy country. We also spotted a few mature bulls across the valley on a low bench.
The next morning we made a plan to descend to the valley floor, cross over and climb up the other side to access a small bench the Tahr were on. 3000feet down and 3000feet back up again and we had a wee camp set up in the lee of a ridge out of the wind. That evening we sat and glassed below us, waiting. We knew there were Tahr around but saw very little of them.

Day break and we were glassing a mob of nannies with 3 mature bulls in tow below us. Tim had split up from me and Jimmy to explore further around the ridge. Jimmy and I decided to descend on the bulls and have a closer look. We have both shot great bulls in the 13 ½” class but I was in need of a big winter skin for one of my clients. Plus I had been carrying around my No5 Mk1 Lee Enfield “jungle carbine” and needed to test this beast out on some Tahr!
As we made our way quickly down the slope I stopped dead in my tracks. Bull! Not 30 yards away was a mature bull unaware of us. He was focused on the bulls and nannies below. Quickly we dropped packs and got our cameras out. This was a great opportunity to get some cool close up footage of a bull.
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Things got a little messy here and the end result was a frustrated Jimmy and a dead Bull Tahr. In an effort to get some good pictures James was atop a rock, the bull heard us and took off. I took a fleeting few shots at the bull as he made his escape and James’s nice SLR took a wee tumble. I was unaware of Jimmy’s troubles and thought he had just captured some awesome footage. Instead he had a hefty repair bill ahead of him. Such is mountain hunting haha, Tahr hunting can be very hard on gear!

We made our way over to the bull, who after I remembered how to aim, copped a 174gn round nose to the shoulder which sent him nose first into a rock chute. Needless to say the old .303 British did the job perfectly, breaking both shoulders and stopping the bull in his tracks. After a photo session we skinned the Bull out for a life size mount. He was not a monster but a good mature bull with a great skin and horns just under the 12” mark.
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Jimmy decided he wanted to head back to camp and check out some other country on the way, I wanted to continue down and check out the other bulls around. Jimmy kindly took the full skin (cheers mate!) back up to camp. I spent the evening wandering about and glassing. Saw a lot of young bulls and had some cool close encounters with a few. I also saw a couple of good looking Bulls in some real tiger country that was not fit for a human. Was great to see so many bulls about and I headed back to camp in the dark, happy with the day and glad we had a nice skin.
Tim had a similar day to us minus the broken camera and dead Tahr. He had seen a lot of the same bulls we had and took some great photos. That evening we admired the awesome views of the mountains and the amazing star lit night.


The next morning we packed up early and heading down to the truck, we had a long drive ahead and 9 deer to try and squeeze into the truck which were sitting in the chiller back on the farm.


This was a great wee trip and a great example of how a bit of map gazing, a bit of hard work and a little luck can all come together. Thanks Tim and Jimmy, looking forward to the next one!
 
This is one of the greatest things I've ever seen. 100 something wallabies?! And crazy steep mountains?! Sign me up.
 
Heres a few more photos from the trip!
and yes we shot 120 wallabies in two days, we coulda shot more but ran out of ammo......happens every time haha
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Tahr is on my list for my next trip to NZ. What an awesome country.
Thanks for the story and great photos.
 
well done mate. as said that is an amazing picture.

i was over there from may 11-24th. the weather was terrible and forced us to change plans. we were going to walk into the west coast but that was impossible. like you we had to go the the eastern side. between never having been in the area, still poor weather and carrying trad bows we didn't have much luck.
 
Do you eat the wallabys?

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Ive eaten a couple but they are pretty average. I have been trying to source a use for them, pet food seems to be the way to go at the moment. They are a huge pest problem in parts of the country
 
Heres a few more pictures
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our Haul of meat from the Fallow deer! Mainly yearlings and young does.Best eating deer there is!
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after math of Jimmys camera "incident" he was understandable a little annoyed haha
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My Bull with the ol three 'oh. built in 1947 all matching numbers, shoots beautifully
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Our camp on the 2nd night
 
It is wheels up in 5 days to the south island of NZ. I will be hunting Tahr and Red Stag. Tahr is my focus animal as I love the mountain hunts. MTG
 
Gold as gold mate! To be honest I don't recognise the valley but the terrain looks so damn fun. Is he about 12.5" or so? I'd be keen as to come shoot fallow next February or so. Swap a hunt, you can use my ar15 over here in New Mexico on aoudad. Here till November. Tags are otc, or help out logistics on Colorado elk. Let me know. Cheers mate.
 
Top stuff mate, always wanted to get an old 30'.

Ripper hunt by the sounds, need to get back over myself soon.

Keep it up 👍

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Gold as gold mate! To be honest I don't recognise the valley but the terrain looks so damn fun. Is he about 12.5" or so? I'd be keen as to come shoot fallow next February or so. Swap a hunt, you can use my ar15 over here in New Mexico on aoudad. Here till November. Tags are otc, or help out logistics on Colorado elk. Let me know. Cheers mate.

That terrain aint all that fun, avalanches and rock fall daily.
Just under 12", shot for a client who needed a skin.

I hunted Colorado last year for elk.
Audad is on the list(its a long list haha)
 
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